Questo documento volutamente non viene tradotto in Italiano in quanto essendo il suo contenuto compostoessenzialmente da termini strettamente tecnici, una loro traduzione in Italiano comporterebbe la perdita del significato originale e un disallineamento con quanto presente nel sorgente dello scompattatore UnRAR.
Here we describe basic data structures of archive format introduced in RAR 5.0. If you need information about algorithms or more detailed information on data structures, please use UnRAR source code. |
vint
Variable length integer. Can include one or more bytes, where lower 7 bits of every byte contain integer data and highest bit in every byte is the continuation flag. If highest bit is 0, this is the last byte in sequence. So first byte contains 7 least significant bits of integer and continuation flag. Second byte, if present, contains next 7 bits and so on.
Currently RAR format uses vint to store up to 64 bit integers, resulting in 10 bytes maximum. This value may be increased in the future if necessary for some reason.
Sometimes RAR needs to pre-allocate space for vint before knowing its exact value. In such situation it can allocate more space than really necessary and then fill several leading bytes with 0x80 hexadecimal, which means 0 with continuation flag set.
byte, uint16, uint32, uint64
Byte, 16-, 32-, 64- bit unsigned integer in little endian format.
Variable length data
We use ellipsis ... to denote variable length data areas.
Hexadecimal values
We use 0x prefix to define hexadecimal values, such as 0xf000 |
General archive block format
Field |
Size |
Description |
Header CRC32 |
uint32 |
CRC32 of header data starting from Header size field and up to and including the optional extra area. |
Header size |
vint |
Size of header data starting from Header type field and up to and including the optional extra area. This field must not be longer than 3 bytes in current implementation, resulting in 2 MB maximum header size. |
Header type |
vint |
Type of archive header. Possible values are:
1 |
Main archive header. |
2 |
File header. |
3 |
Service header. |
4 |
Archive encryption header. |
5 |
End of archive header. |
|
Header flags |
vint |
Flags common for all headers:
0x0001 |
Extra area is present in the end of header. |
0x0002 |
Data area is present in the end of header. |
0x0004 |
Blocks with unknown type and this flag must be skipped when updating an archive. |
0x0008 |
Data area is continuing from previous volume. |
0x0010 |
Data area is continuing in next volume. |
0x0020 |
Block depends on preceding file block. |
0x0040 |
Preserve a child block if host block is modified. |
|
Extra area size |
vint |
Size of extra area. Optional field, present only if 0x0001 header flag is set. |
Data size |
vint |
Size of data area. Optional field, present only if 0x0002 header flag is set. |
... |
... |
Fields specific for current block type. See concrete block types description for details. |
Extra area |
... |
Optional area containing additional header fields, present only if 0x0001 header flag is set. |
Data area |
vint |
Optional data area, present only if 0x0002 header flag is set. Used to store large data amounts, such as compressed file data. Not counted in Header CRC and Header size fields. |
General extra area format
Extra area can include one or more records having the following format:
Field |
Size |
Description |
Size |
vint |
Size of record data starting from Type. |
Type |
vint |
Record type. Different archive blocks have different associated extra area record types. Read the concrete archive block description for details. New record types can be added in the future, so unknown record types need to be skipped without interrupting an operation. |
Data |
... |
Record dependent data. May be missing if record consists only from size and type. |
General archive layout
Self-extracting module (optional)
RAR 5.0 signature
Archive encryption header (optional)
Main archive header
Archive comment service header (optional)
File header 1
Service headers (NTFS ACL, streams, etc.) for preceding file (optional)
...
File header N
Service headers (NTFS ACL, streams, etc.) for preceding file (optional)
Recovery record (optional)
End of archive header |
Self-extracting module (SFX)
Any data preceding the archive signature. Self-extracting module size and contents is not defined. At the moment of writing this documentation RAR assumes the maximum SFX module size to not exceed 1 MB, but this value can be increased in the future.
RAR 5.0 signature
RAR 5.0 signature consists of 8 bytes: 0x52 0x61 0x72 0x21 0x1A 0x07 0x01 0x00. You need to search for this signature in supposed archive from beginning and up to maximum SFX module size. Just for comparison this is RAR 4.x 7 byte length signature: 0x52 0x61 0x72 0x21 0x1A 0x07 0x00.
Archive encryption header
Field |
Size |
Description |
Header CRC32 |
uint32 |
|
Header size |
vint |
|
Header type |
vint |
4 |
Header flags |
vint |
Flags common for all headers |
Encryption version |
vint |
Version of encryption algorithm. Now only 0 version (AES-256) is supported. |
Encryption flags |
vint |
0x0001 Password check data is present. |
KDF count |
1 byte |
Binary logarithm of iteration number for PBKDF2 function. RAR can refuse to process KDF count exceeding some threshold. Concrete value of threshold is version dependent. |
Salt |
16 bytes |
Salt value used globally for all encrypted archive headers. |
Check value |
12 bytes |
Value used to verify the password validity. Present only if 0x0001 encryption flag is set. First 8 bytes are calculated using additional PBKDF2 rounds, 4 last bytes is the additional checksum. Together with the standard header CRC32 we have 64 bit checksum to reliably verify this field integrity and distinguish invalid password and damaged data. Further details can be found in UnRAR source code. |
This header is present only in archives with encrypted headers. Every next header after this one is started from 16 byte AES-256 initialization vector followed by encrypted header data. Size of encrypted header data block is aligned to 16 byte boundary.
Main archive header
Field |
Size |
Description |
Header CRC32 |
uint32 |
|
Header size |
vint |
|
Header type |
vint |
1 |
Header flags |
vint |
Flags common for all headers |
Extra area size |
vint |
Size of extra area. Optional field, present only if 0x0001 header flag is set. |
Archive flags |
vint |
0x0001 |
Volume. Archive is a part of multivolume set. |
0x0002 |
Volume number field is present. This flag is present in all volumes except first. |
0x0004 |
Solid archive. |
0x0008 |
Recovery record is present. |
0x0010 |
Locked archive. |
|
Volume number |
vint |
Optional field, present only if 0x0002 archive flag is set. Not present for first volume, 1 for second volume, 2 for third and so on. |
Extra area |
... |
Optional area containing additional header fields, present only if 0x0001 header flag is set. |
Extra area of main archive header can contain following record types
Type |
Name |
Description |
0x01 |
Locator |
Contains positions of different service blocks, so they can be accessed quickly, without scanning the entire archive. This record is optional. If it is missing, it is still necessary to scan the entire archive to verify presence of service blocks. |
Locator record
Field |
Size |
Description |
Size |
vint |
|
Type |
vint |
1 |
Flags |
vint |
0x0001 |
Quick open record offset is present. |
0x0002 |
Recovery record offset is present. |
|
Quick open offset |
vint |
Distance from beginning of quick open service block to beginning of main archive header. Present only if 0x0001 flag is set. If equal to 0, should be ignored. It can be set to zero if preallocated space was not enough to store resulting offset. |
Recovery record offset |
vint |
Distance from beginning of recovery record service block to beginning of main archive header. Present only if 0x0002 flag is set. If equal to 0, should be ignored. It can be set to zero if preallocated space was not enough to store resulting offset. |
File header and service header
These two header types use the similar data structure, so we describe them both here.
Field |
Size |
Description |
Header CRC32 |
uint32 |
|
Header size |
vint |
|
Header type |
vint |
2 for file header, 3 for service header |
Header flags |
vint |
Flags common for all headers |
Extra area size |
vint |
Size of extra area. Optional field, present only if 0x0001 header flag is set. |
Data size |
vint |
Size of data area. Optional field, present only if 0x0002 header flag is set. For file header this field contains the packed file size. |
File flags |
vint |
Flags specific for these header types:
0x0001 |
Directory file system object (file header only). |
0x0002 |
Time field in Unix format is present. |
0x0004 |
CRC32 field is present. |
0x0008 |
Unpacked size is unknown. |
If flag 0x0008 is set, unpacked size field is still present, but must be ignored and extraction must be performed until reaching the end of compression stream. This flag can be set in multivolume archives if actual file size is larger than reported by OS. |
Unpacked size |
vint |
Unpacked file or service data size. |
Attributes |
vint |
Operating system specific file attributes in case of file header. Might be either used for data specific needs or just reserved and set to 0 for service header. |
mtime |
uint32 |
File modification time in Unix time format. Optional, present if 0x0002 file flag is set. |
Data CRC32 |
uint32 |
CRC32 of file or service data. Optional, present if 0x0004 file flag is set. |
Compression information |
vint |
Lower 6 bits (0x003f mask) contain the version of compression algorithm, resulting in possible 0 - 63 values. Current version is 0.
7th bit (0x0040) defines the solid flag. If it is set, RAR continues to use the compression dictionary left after processing preceding files.
Bits 8 - 10 (0x0380 mask) define the compression method. Currently only values 0 - 5 are used. 0 means no compression.
Bits 11 - 14 (0x3c00) define the minimum size of dictionary size required to extract data. Value 0 means 128 KB, 1 - 256 KB, ..., 14 - 2048 MB, 15 - 4096 MB. |
Host OS |
vint |
Type of operating system used to create the archive.
0x0000 |
Windows |
0x0001 |
Unix |
|
Name length |
vint |
File or service header name length. |
Name |
? bytes |
Variable length field containing Name length bytes in UTF-8 format without trailing zero.
For file header this is a name of archived file. Forward slash character is used as the path separator both for Unix and Windows names. Backslashes are treated as a part of name for Unix names and as invalid character for Windows file names. Type of name is defined by Host OS field.
If Unix file name contains any high ASCII characters which cannot be correctly converted to Unicode and UTF-8, we map such characters to to 0xE080 - 0xE0FF private use Unicode area and insert 0xFFFE Unicode non-character to resulting string to indicate that it contains mapped characters, which need to be converted back when extracting. Concrete position of 0xFFFE is not defined, we need to search the entire string for it. Such mapped names are not portable and can be correctly unpacked only on the same system where they were created.
For service header this field contains a name of service header. Now the following names are used:
CMT |
Archive comment |
QO |
Archive quick open data |
ACL |
NTFS file permissions |
STM |
NTFS alternate data stream |
RR |
Recovery record |
|
Extra area |
... |
Optional area containing additional header fields, present only if 0x0001 header flag is set. |
Data area |
vint |
Optional data area, present only if 0x0002 header flag is set. Store file data in case of file header or service data for service header. Depending on the compression method value in Compression information can be either uncompressed (compression method 0) or compressed. |
Type |
Name |
Description |
0x01 |
File encryption |
File encryption information. |
0x02 |
File hash |
File data hash. |
0x03 |
File time |
High precision file time. |
0x04 |
File version |
File version number. |
0x05 |
Redirection |
File system redirection. |
0x06 |
Unix owner |
Unix owner and group information. |
0x07 |
Service data |
Service header data array. |
File encryption record
This record is present if file data is encrypted.
Field |
Size |
Description |
Size |
vint |
|
Type |
vint |
0x01 |
Version |
vint |
Version of encryption algorithm. Now only 0 version (AES-256) is supported. |
Flags |
vint |
0x0001 |
Password check data is present |
0x0002 |
Use MAC instead of plain checksums |
If flag 0x0002 is present, RAR transforms the checksum preserving file or service data integrity, so it becomes dependent on encryption key. It makes guessing file contents based on checksum impossible. It affects both data CRC32 in file header and checksums in file hash record in extra area. |
KDF count |
1 byte |
Binary logarithm of iteration number for PBKDF2 function. RAR can refuse to process KDF count exceeding some threshold. Concrete value of threshold is version dependent. |
Salt |
16 bytes |
Salt value to set the decryption key for encrypted file. |
IV |
16 bytes |
AES-256 initialization vector. |
Check value |
12 bytes |
Value used to verify the password validity. Present only if 0x0001 encryption flag is set. First 8 bytes are calculated using additional PBKDF2 rounds, 4 last bytes is the additional checksum. Together with the standard header CRC32 we have 64 bit checksum to reliably verify this field integrity and distinguish invalid password and damaged data. Further details can be found in UnRAR source code. |
File hash record
Only the standard CRC32 checksum can be stored directly in file header. If other hash is used, it is stored in this extra area record:
Field |
Size |
Description |
Size |
vint |
|
Type |
vint |
0x02 |
Hash type |
vint |
0x00 BLAKE2sp hash function.
|
Hash data |
? bytes |
32 bytes of BLAKE2sp for 0x00 hash type. |
File time record
This record is used if it is necessary to store creation and last access time or if 1 second precision of Unix mtime stored in file header is not enough:
Field |
Size |
Description |
Size |
vint |
|
Type |
vint |
0x03 |
Flags |
vint |
0x0001 |
Time is stored in Unix time format if this flags is set and in Windows FILETIME format otherwise |
0x0002 |
Modification time is present |
0x0004 |
Creation time is present |
0x0008 |
Last access time is present |
|
mtime |
uint32 or uint64 |
Modification time. Present if 0x0002 flag is set. Depending on 0x0001 flag can be in Unix time or Windows FILETIME format. |
ctime |
uint32 or uint64 |
Creation time. Present if 0x0004 flag is set. Depending on 0x0001 flag can be in Unix time or Windows FILETIME format. |
ctime |
uint32 or uint64 |
Last access time. Present if 0x0008 flag is set. Depending on 0x0001 flag can be in Unix time or Windows FILETIME format. |
File version record
This record is used in archives created with -ver switch.
Field |
Size |
Description |
Size |
vint |
|
Type |
vint |
0x04 |
Flags |
vint |
No file version flags are defined yet, so it is set to 0. |
Version number |
vint |
File version number. |
File system redirection record
Field |
Size |
Description |
Size |
vint |
|
Type |
vint |
0x05 |
Redirection type |
vint |
0x0001 |
Unix symlink |
0x0002 |
Windows symlink |
0x0003 |
Windows junction |
0x0004 |
Hard link |
0x0005 |
File copy |
|
Flags |
vint |
0x0001 Link target is directory
|
Name length |
vint |
Length of link target name |
Name |
vint |
Link target name in UTF-8 format without trailing zero |
Unix owner record
Field |
Size |
Description |
Size |
vint |
|
Type |
vint |
0x06 |
Flags |
vint |
0x0001 |
User name string is present |
0x0002 |
Group name string is present |
0x0004 |
Numeric user ID is present |
0x0008 |
Numeric group ID is present |
|
User name length |
vint |
Length of owner user name. Present if 0x0001 flag is set. |
User name |
? bytes |
Owner user name in native encoding. Not zero terminated. Present if 0x0001 flag is set. |
Group name length |
vint |
Length of owner group name. Present if 0x0002 flag is set. |
Group name |
? bytes |
Owner group name in native encoding. Not zero terminated. Present if 0x0002 flag is set. |
User ID |
vint |
Numeric owner user ID. Present if 0x0004 flag is set. |
Group ID |
vint |
Numeric owner group ID. Present if 0x0008 flag is set. |
Service data record
This record is used only by service headers to store additional parameters.
Field |
Size |
Description |
Size |
vint |
|
Type |
vint |
0x07 |
Data |
? bytes |
Concrete contents of service data depends on service header type. |
End of archive header
End of archive marker. RAR does not read anything after this header letting to use third party tools to add extra information such as a digital signature to archive.
Field |
Size |
Description |
Header CRC32 |
uint32 |
|
Header size |
vint |
|
Header type |
vint |
5 |
Header flags |
vint |
Flags common for all headers |
End of archive flags |
vint |
0x0001 |
Archive is volume and it is not last volume in the set
|
|
|
RAR uses service headers based on the file header data structure to store different supplementary information.
Archive comment header
Optional header storing the main archive comment. Contains CMT identifier in file name field. Placed before any file headers and after the main archive header. Comment data is stored in UTF-8 immediately after the archive comment header. Now RAR does not use compression for archive comments, so packed and unpacked data sizes in header are equal and they both define the comment data size. Compression method in header is set to 0.
Quick open header
Optional header storing the quick open record. Contains QO identifier in file name field. Placed after all file headers, but before the recovery record and end of archive header. It is possible to locate the quick open header with locator record in main archive header.
Quick open record data is stored immediately after the quick open header. RAR does not use compression for quick open data, so packed and unpacked data sizes in header are equal and they both define the quick open data size. Compression method in header is set to 0.
Quick open data is the array consisting of data cache structures. Every data cache structure stores a portion of archived data and has the following format:
Field |
Size |
Description |
Structure CRC32 |
uint32 |
CRC32 of structure data starting from Structure size field. |
Structure size |
vint |
Size of structure data starting from Flags field. This field must not be longer than 3 bytes in current implementation, resulting in 2 MB maximum size. |
Flags |
vint |
Currently set to 0. |
Offset |
vint |
Offset from beginning of quick open header to beginning of archive data cached in current structure. We can use this value to calculate the absolute position of archived data stored the current structure. It is guaranteed that absolute archive positions referred by data cache structures are always growing when going from beginning of structure array to end. |
Data size |
vint |
Size of archive data stored in the current structure. |
Data |
? bytes |
Archive data stored in the current structure. |
Normally RAR uses the quick open data to store copies of file and service headers. It can store either all headers or only a part of them. If required header is missing in quick open data or if structure CRC32 is invalid, data are read from its original archive position.
Using the quick open data is optional. You can skip it completley and read only standard archive headers. But it is important to use the same access pattern when reading file names to display them to user and to extract files. Otherwise it would be possible to see one file name and extract another in case the quick open data and real archive data are intentionally created different. It could introduce a security threat. So if you use the quick open data when displaying the archive contents, use it when extracting. If you do not use it when displaying the archive contents, do not use it when extracting. |